Light-Bulb Moment: Doctors Find True Cause of Toddler's Cough

This x-ray shows the object lodged in the girl's right bronchus.
This x-ray shows the object lodged in the girl's right bronchus.
(Image credit: © BMJ 2015)

Surgeons who were treating an infant girl likely had a light-bulb moment of their own when they realized the object they had just retrieved from the girl's windpipe was a light-emitting diode (LED) bulb she had inhaled.

The doctors had originally guessed that the item inside the 15-month-old girl's chest was her grandmother's hairpin, but the U-shaped object seen on the child's chest X-ray turned out to be an LED bulb, perhaps from one of the toddler's toys, according to a new report of the girl's case published online Aug. 26 in the journal BMJ Case Reports.

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Cari Nierenberg has been writing about health and wellness topics for online news outlets and print publications for more than two decades. Her work has been published by Live Science, The Washington Post, WebMD, Scientific American, among others. She has a Bachelor of Science degree in nutrition from Cornell University and a Master of Science degree in Nutrition and Communication from Boston University.